This Article is From Mar 11, 2019

Grounding Boeing 737 MAX Fleet After Ethiopia Crash, Says Indonesia

The inspections on Indonesia's 11 Max 8 jets would start on Tuesday and the plane would remain grounded until it was cleared by safety regulators.

Grounding Boeing 737 MAX Fleet After Ethiopia Crash, Says Indonesia

On Sunday, 157 passengers and crew members of a 737 MAX operated by Ethiopian Airlines died in a crash.

Jakarta:

Indonesia said on Monday it was grounding its Boeing 737 MAX 8 jets after the Ethiopian Airlines crash and another deadly accident involving the same model near Jakarta in October.

"The Director General of Air Transport will take steps to carry out inspections and temporarily prohibit Boeing 737 Max 8 from flying in Indonesia," Director General of Air Transport Polana Pramesti told reporters in Jakarta.

The inspections on Indonesia's 11 Max 8 jets would start on Tuesday and the plane would remain grounded until it was cleared by safety regulators, she added.

Ten of Indonesia's Max 8 jets are operated by Lion Air while the other is flown by national carrier Garuda.

On Sunday, 157 passengers and crew members of a 737 MAX operated by Ethiopian Airlines were killed shortly after the Nairobi-bound flight took off from Addis Ababa.

The plane is the same type as the Indonesian Lion Air jet that crashed in October, just minutes after takeoff from Jakarta, killing all 189 people on board.

The decision from Indonesia's transport ministry came as China also ordered its airlines to suspend commercial operations of the state-of-the-art model earlier on Monday.

Noting the "similarities" between the two accidents, China's Civil Aviation Administration said domestic airlines had until Monday evening to ground all 737 MAX 8 aircraft.

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